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Dec 3, 2012
12/12
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now elaine quijano tells us new orleans firefighters are returning the favor following sandy. >> what would you want to say to these guys? >> i love them for coming up here. this is the captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news." >> jeff: good evening, i'm jeff glor. they are the storms that don't seem to quit. torrential rains and powerful winds sweeping across northern california one more time. thousands are without power. and rising floodwaters are threatening many more. still it could have been much worse. carter evans is in sonoma tonight. >> reporter: this was the last punch in a weather system that's been pounding california for five days. and it was supposed to be the worst. the rains came with a vengence, high winds uprooted trees and overturned trucks near san francisco. to the east colder temperatures turned heavy rain into snow, saving the mountain town of truckee from the predicted flooding. california's wine country had also braced for the worst. >> the water was coming very fast and furious but the cole vert system that we've created was able to take tha
now elaine quijano tells us new orleans firefighters are returning the favor following sandy. >> what would you want to say to these guys? >> i love them for coming up here. this is the captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news." >> jeff: good evening, i'm jeff glor. they are the storms that don't seem to quit. torrential rains and powerful winds sweeping across northern california one more time. thousands are without power. and rising floodwaters are...
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Dec 5, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano has the latest on the flu. >> reporter: dr. adam murdoch is already treating two flu patients a day at his dallas clinic. last year at this time he wasn't seeing that many in a week. >> the fact that we've seen an uptick this early in the season potentially indicates this is could be a bad flu season. >> reporter: texas is one of five southern states seeing the highest concentration of suspected cases. >> the flu vaccine is the best way we have to prevent flu-like illness but it's not 100% preventative. >> reporter: michael osterholm specializes in infectious diseases. he says the vaccine is 59% effective in young, healthy adults. osterholm examined medical records and flu studies dating back to 1936. >> if we do nothing to change our current vaccines we in two ways miss very, very important outcome goals. one is protecting those who are over age 65, the age population that has the highest risk of death. the second piece is that when the next pandemic strain of influenza virus emerges somewhere in the world we very well miss th
elaine quijano has the latest on the flu. >> reporter: dr. adam murdoch is already treating two flu patients a day at his dallas clinic. last year at this time he wasn't seeing that many in a week. >> the fact that we've seen an uptick this early in the season potentially indicates this is could be a bad flu season. >> reporter: texas is one of five southern states seeing the highest concentration of suspected cases. >> the flu vaccine is the best way we have to prevent...
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Dec 18, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano with some of the first responders at the crime scene. >> i was almost wishing that it was full of injured people. i never -- nobody. >> pelley: higher taxes are coming but who should pay them? nancy cordes talks to the speaker of the house about his negotiations with the president. and elizabeth palmer in dunblane scotland, one place that knows newtown's long road to recovery all too well. >> i think out of the most tragic circumstances some good does appear. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening, more parents than usual walked with their kids as the schools of newtown reopened today. when a family met the stepped-up security there wasn't a sense of fear but a sense of moving forward together. and this was our favorite image. we were going to write something about it but then we realized it speaks well enough for itself. sandy hook elementary was the one school that did not reopen. as you know well, 20 first graders were killed there on friday along with six staff members. the gunman also killed his mother
elaine quijano with some of the first responders at the crime scene. >> i was almost wishing that it was full of injured people. i never -- nobody. >> pelley: higher taxes are coming but who should pay them? nancy cordes talks to the speaker of the house about his negotiations with the president. and elizabeth palmer in dunblane scotland, one place that knows newtown's long road to recovery all too well. >> i think out of the most tragic circumstances some good does appear....
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Dec 22, 2012
12/12
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jim. >> axelrod: elaine quijano in newtown, thank you. the debate over guns and school safety will only intensify as the calls for action in the wake of newtown grow louder. chip reid is in washington with that part of the story. >> columbine. >> virginia tech, tucson. >> reporter: more than 50 hool stars joined forces to make this new public service announcement calling for an end to gun violence. >> it's time. >> it's time for our leaders to act. >> demand a plan. >> reporter: the question now, should a plan include the nra's call for putting an armed officer in every school? >> it's total nonsense. >> reporter: no, is the answer from andrei nikitchyuk whose eight-year-old son was in the hallway at sandy hook limitary as bullets flew nearby. the solution, he says, is gun control. >> why are we allowing sales of weapons that terrible in this country? >> reporter: that is shared by some parents parents in washington, d.c. where the son of bola aina attends school. >> mow we don't want guns in our school. >> reporter: but some parent here
jim. >> axelrod: elaine quijano in newtown, thank you. the debate over guns and school safety will only intensify as the calls for action in the wake of newtown grow louder. chip reid is in washington with that part of the story. >> columbine. >> virginia tech, tucson. >> reporter: more than 50 hool stars joined forces to make this new public service announcement calling for an end to gun violence. >> it's time. >> it's time for our leaders to act. >>...
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elaine quijano reports. >> she was nervous when she finally went off the drug. >> all of a sudden you're done and it's very scary. it's very scary because you have to then go back and you really you have nothing protecting you from the medical standpoint anymore. >> reporter: capasello was 33 when she was diagnosed. estrogen is the main fuel for breast cancer in younger women who have not gone through menopause. tamoxifen works by blocking the effect of estrogen. it works by having the women take it for five years because previous study showed no benefit for taking it longer. but the new study funded partly by one of the makers of tamoxifen for ten years were 25% less likely to have a recurrence of breast cancer and 29% less likely to die from the disease than those who took it for five. dr. judy gash ber is with boston's dana farber cancer institute. >> i think this will have an effect on practice, and particularly for my young patients. i think they'll feel much safer for all of us. >> reporter: but there are significant side effects. most women have immediate effects of menopause incl
elaine quijano reports. >> she was nervous when she finally went off the drug. >> all of a sudden you're done and it's very scary. it's very scary because you have to then go back and you really you have nothing protecting you from the medical standpoint anymore. >> reporter: capasello was 33 when she was diagnosed. estrogen is the main fuel for breast cancer in younger women who have not gone through menopause. tamoxifen works by blocking the effect of estrogen. it works by...
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Dec 19, 2012
12/12
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i'm sorry that we couldn't help one. >> pelley: elaine quijano with newtown assistant fire chief ray corbo and firefighter rob manna. a major storm system is headed east after slamming the pacific northwest. heavy rain near everett, washington, triggered a mud slide on a 100-foot cliff. look what happened next! as the mud slammed into seven cars of a passing freight train pushing them all the rails. nbc news correspondent richard engel is free from his captors in syria. we'll have that story next. wit. the usual, bob? not today. [ male announcer ] bob has afib: atrial fibrillation not caused by a heart valve problem, a condition that puts him at greater risk for a stroke. [ gps ] turn left. i don't think so. [ male announcer ] for years, bob took warfarin, and made a monthly trip to the clinic to get his blood tested. but not anymore. bob's doctor recommended a different option: once-a-day xarelto®. xarelto® is the first and only once-a-day prescription blood thinner for patients with afib not caused by a heart valve problem, that doesn't require routine blood monitoring. like warf
i'm sorry that we couldn't help one. >> pelley: elaine quijano with newtown assistant fire chief ray corbo and firefighter rob manna. a major storm system is headed east after slamming the pacific northwest. heavy rain near everett, washington, triggered a mud slide on a 100-foot cliff. look what happened next! as the mud slammed into seven cars of a passing freight train pushing them all the rails. nbc news correspondent richard engel is free from his captors in syria. we'll have that...
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Dec 19, 2012
12/12
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i'm sorry that we couldn't help more. >> elaine quijano, reporting this morning. >>> the trial of two bp rig supervisors has been delayed for over a year. robert kazula and donald vidrine are charged in the explosion that led to the death of 11 workers. it happened on the deepwater horizon in april of 2010. their lawyers say they need more time to go through more than a million pages of information prosecutors plan to give them. the trial had been scheduled for february. it will now be held in january of 2014. >>> coming up next, your wednesday morning weather and something to chew on. the maker of gummy bears wins a lawsuit against the copying of the iconic bear. like somebody had set a bag of hot charcoal on my neck. i was a firefighter for 24 years. but, i have never encountered such a burning sensation until i had the shingles. i remember it well. i was in the back yard doing yard work. i had this irritation going on in my lower neck. i changed shirts because i thought there was something in the collar of the shirt irritating my neck. and i couldn't figure out what was going on. i
i'm sorry that we couldn't help more. >> elaine quijano, reporting this morning. >>> the trial of two bp rig supervisors has been delayed for over a year. robert kazula and donald vidrine are charged in the explosion that led to the death of 11 workers. it happened on the deepwater horizon in april of 2010. their lawyers say they need more time to go through more than a million pages of information prosecutors plan to give them. the trial had been scheduled for february. it will...
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Dec 28, 2012
12/12
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it elaine quijano met one family whose adoption is now on hold. >> look at this. look. >> reporter: two years ago kim and robert summers decided to adopt from russia. it took nearly 18 months, but last july, the couple was matched with a 15-month-old boy. when you saw his picture for the first time, what did you think? >> i knew that this was the child i was meant to parent. and i took one look at this little ginger boy, and i can follow in love with him. >> reporter: the summers began filling their new jersey home with baby clothees, a crib, and even a stroller. they traveled to his orgmag in russia twice to bond with him. >> say, hi, daddy. >> reporter: you've given him a name. >> ypreston mackey summers. he's a wonderful young boy who needs love and attention. it. >> reporter: like 1500 other american families, the summers worry that the law banning americans from adopting russian children could prevent them from bringing a child home. the law is widely seen as retaliation for a new american law banning russians accuse of human rights violations from entering t
it elaine quijano met one family whose adoption is now on hold. >> look at this. look. >> reporter: two years ago kim and robert summers decided to adopt from russia. it took nearly 18 months, but last july, the couple was matched with a 15-month-old boy. when you saw his picture for the first time, what did you think? >> i knew that this was the child i was meant to parent. and i took one look at this little ginger boy, and i can follow in love with him. >> reporter:...
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Dec 9, 2012
12/12
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if it doesn't come back for two years, her doctors can declare her cured. >> elaine quijano, cbs news, pennsylvania. >> jeff: prince william cancelled a scheduled appearance today to stay home with his wife katherine, while attending a charity ball last night he commented on her pregnancy which sent her to the hospital. he said i don't know why they call it morning sickness, they should call it all day and all night sickness. in the state of washington same-sex weddings took place for the first time today. the courthouse in seattle welcomed couples to take their vows just after midnight after voter as proved a law allowing their marriages last month. snow is finally getting to parts of the midwest. the first major storm of the season moved into areas of minnesota and wisconsin today. it is expected to dump as much as 10 inches of snow. iowa just got a trace this weekend. it's first snow in 267-- 278 days, nebraska hasn't seen it since february. >> just ahead on tonight's "cbs evening news", in the field with afghan special forces. she's everything to you. but your erectile dysfunction
if it doesn't come back for two years, her doctors can declare her cured. >> elaine quijano, cbs news, pennsylvania. >> jeff: prince william cancelled a scheduled appearance today to stay home with his wife katherine, while attending a charity ball last night he commented on her pregnancy which sent her to the hospital. he said i don't know why they call it morning sickness, they should call it all day and all night sickness. in the state of washington same-sex weddings took place...
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Dec 5, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano on a new study that could lead to a major change in treatment for breast cancer. >> recurrence is something you live with for your entire life. >> pelley: a household name in computers is wanted in a murder investigation. bob orr reports he was tracked down by the technology he lived by. and we note two milestones: an eyewitness to this moment in history has died. then anthony mason will take five to remember dave brubeck, a giant of jazz. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening, they've never said it quite like this: the president's treasury secretary made it clear there is no room for compromise. republicans must accept an increase in tax rates for upper-income americans. negotiations on a budget deal haven't gone very far and there are just 27 days before that so-called fiscal cliff. that's the package of tax increases for most americans and budget cuts that will hit automatically unless the white house and congress find a gentler way to solve the crisis in the federal budget. here's how treasury secretary tim gei
elaine quijano on a new study that could lead to a major change in treatment for breast cancer. >> recurrence is something you live with for your entire life. >> pelley: a household name in computers is wanted in a murder investigation. bob orr reports he was tracked down by the technology he lived by. and we note two milestones: an eyewitness to this moment in history has died. then anthony mason will take five to remember dave brubeck, a giant of jazz. captioning sponsored by cbs...
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Dec 11, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano is at the state capitol in lansing, michigan. elaine, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the protests here in michigan first popped up last week and only expected to get bigger. in fact, so many teachers took personal leave to be here today that two school districts in the detroit metro area were forced to cancel classes. >> hey, hey, ho, ho, right to work has got to go! >> reporter: at michigan state capitol, they're planning to return today in record numbers. protesters determined to defend one of the biggest union strongholds in the country. >> i think that will be historical if 10,000 people do show up. >> reporter: at issue michigan's right to work legislation which would make it illegal to force workers to join unions or pay dues. republican lawmakers pushed the measure through last week without any debate, sparking widespread outbreak. >> right to work has got to go! >> reporter: even president obama weighed in at a detroit truck factory monday. >> these right to work don't have anything to do with economics. they ha
elaine quijano is at the state capitol in lansing, michigan. elaine, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the protests here in michigan first popped up last week and only expected to get bigger. in fact, so many teachers took personal leave to be here today that two school districts in the detroit metro area were forced to cancel classes. >> hey, hey, ho, ho, right to work has got to go! >> reporter: at michigan state capitol, they're planning to return today in record...
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Dec 20, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano in newtown. with only days left to stop tax increases, president obama tells republicans: take the deal. nancy cordes has their resign in the death of a u.s. ambassador. margaret brennan reports. and the woman getting newtown hohools open again.
elaine quijano in newtown. with only days left to stop tax increases, president obama tells republicans: take the deal. nancy cordes has their resign in the death of a u.s. ambassador. margaret brennan reports. and the woman getting newtown hohools open again.
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Dec 27, 2012
12/12
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the first numbers are coming in, and elaine quijano reports this could be the weakest holiday shopping season in years. hospitals are running out of some cancer drugs for children. >> that is the really scary part-- what if i relapse again? >> axelrod: dr. jon lapook on the danger to the patients. and-- >> i think i found something. >> axelrod: it was the only thing she had left after super storm sandy. michelle miller catches up with a woman determined to start over. >> they all send me e-mails and funny things for me to laugh. they all ask about me, including you. captioning sponsored by cbs
the first numbers are coming in, and elaine quijano reports this could be the weakest holiday shopping season in years. hospitals are running out of some cancer drugs for children. >> that is the really scary part-- what if i relapse again? >> axelrod: dr. jon lapook on the danger to the patients. and-- >> i think i found something. >> axelrod: it was the only thing she had left after super storm sandy. michelle miller catches up with a woman determined to start over....
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Dec 22, 2012
12/12
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. >> pelley: elaine quijano and chip reid report. storms slow the holiday rush. dean reynolds on where the trouble lies. and steve hartman "on the road" finds the loss of a child has
. >> pelley: elaine quijano and chip reid report. storms slow the holiday rush. dean reynolds on where the trouble lies. and steve hartman "on the road" finds the loss of a child has
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Dec 12, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano in michigan where the legislature has voted on a landmark law to reduce the power of unions. and michelle miller. in this season of giving, remembering those who gave all. >> it's got a beautiful look, really. with a nice red bow.
elaine quijano in michigan where the legislature has voted on a landmark law to reduce the power of unions. and michelle miller. in this season of giving, remembering those who gave all. >> it's got a beautiful look, really. with a nice red bow.
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Dec 29, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano on the family heartbreak after russia's president bans all adoptions to americans. >> we ask president putin, please, can he set an alternate means but don't let me children suffer. >> glor: he met saddam hussein and made it look easy. david martin on the death of general norman schwarzkopf and what the world did not know thout him. and "on the road" with steve hartman as a man tries to save his wife of 56 years. an unusual request that gets a unrprising response. >> got two of them and i only need one. captioning sponsored by cbs
elaine quijano on the family heartbreak after russia's president bans all adoptions to americans. >> we ask president putin, please, can he set an alternate means but don't let me children suffer. >> glor: he met saddam hussein and made it look easy. david martin on the death of general norman schwarzkopf and what the world did not know thout him. and "on the road" with steve hartman as a man tries to save his wife of 56 years. an unusual request that gets a unrprising...
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Dec 6, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano reports on how changing a treatment could save lives. >> reporter: when carrie capossela finished a five-year course of tamoxifen to prevent her breast cancer from coming back, she was nervous when she finally went off the drug. >> all of a sudden you're done and it's very scary. it's very scary because you have to then go back and you really having have nothing protecting you from the medical standpoint anymore. >> reporter: capossela was 33 when she was diagnosed. estrogen is the main fuel for breast cancer in younger women who have not gone through menopause. tamoxifen works by blocking the effect of estrogen. the current recommendation is for women to take the drug for five years because previous studies showed no benefit to taking it for longer. but the new study, funded partly by one of the makers of tamoxifen, shows women who took the drug for ten years were 25% less likely to have a recurrence of breast cancer and 29% less likely to die from the disease than those who took it for five. dr. judy garber is with boston's dana-farber cancer institute. >> i think this
elaine quijano reports on how changing a treatment could save lives. >> reporter: when carrie capossela finished a five-year course of tamoxifen to prevent her breast cancer from coming back, she was nervous when she finally went off the drug. >> all of a sudden you're done and it's very scary. it's very scary because you have to then go back and you really having have nothing protecting you from the medical standpoint anymore. >> reporter: capossela was 33 when she was...
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Dec 31, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano is outside presbyterian hospital in upper manhattan. good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you, anthony. doctors are treating hillary clinton with anti-co-ing a lands to thin out the blood clot and they'll continue to monitor her for the next 48 hours. this was during a routine follow-up exam from a recent concussion. this all began after the secretary contracted a stomach illness which led to dehydration. she fainted, hit her head, and sustained a concussion. she has not been seen in public since early december. now, the statement from her spokesman said doctors will continue to assess her condition including other issues associated with her concussion, but there is no word on what those other issues might be. anthony? >> elaine quijano, thank you. >>> and a few miles to the south, times square is getting ready for tonight's new year's eve party. this year safety is on everyone's mind. tony is in times square. tony, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, norah. new york police commissioner called times square the safest place in
elaine quijano is outside presbyterian hospital in upper manhattan. good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you, anthony. doctors are treating hillary clinton with anti-co-ing a lands to thin out the blood clot and they'll continue to monitor her for the next 48 hours. this was during a routine follow-up exam from a recent concussion. this all began after the secretary contracted a stomach illness which led to dehydration. she fainted, hit her head, and sustained a concussion. she has...
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Dec 27, 2012
12/12
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we asked elaine quijano to find out why shoppers were not in a spending mood. >> reporter: the early indications are that shoppers weren't in the holiday shopping spirit this year, and some of the reasons had nothing to do with the economy. dana telsey is a retail analyst. >> whether it was hurricane sandy, the need to spend on the home; whether it was the tragedy in connecticut, and took away the feel-good factor-- it was a confluence of events that led to a "should have been better" holiday season. >> reporter: a big part of the problem was in the densely populated northeast, where more than a fifth of country's retail sales take place. holiday spending priorities shifted after hurricane sandy as homeowners focused more on repairs than on gifts. also dragging down sales was uncertainty about the so-called fiscal cliff, tax hikes and spending cuts set to take effect next year. if lawmakers don't reach a deal to avoid it, consumers could see higher taxes eating into their paychecks. even online sales suffered. compared to past years of double-digit growth, this year, online holiday s
we asked elaine quijano to find out why shoppers were not in a spending mood. >> reporter: the early indications are that shoppers weren't in the holiday shopping spirit this year, and some of the reasons had nothing to do with the economy. dana telsey is a retail analyst. >> whether it was hurricane sandy, the need to spend on the home; whether it was the tragedy in connecticut, and took away the feel-good factor-- it was a confluence of events that led to a "should have been...
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Dec 19, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano with some of the first responders at the crime scene. >> i was almost wishing that it was full of injured people. i never-- nobody. >> pelley: higher taxes are coming but who should pay them? nancy cordes talks to the speaker of the house about his negotiations with the president. nancy cordes talks to the speaker of the house about his negotiations with the president. and elizabeth palmer in dunblane scotland, one place that knows
elaine quijano with some of the first responders at the crime scene. >> i was almost wishing that it was full of injured people. i never-- nobody. >> pelley: higher taxes are coming but who should pay them? nancy cordes talks to the speaker of the house about his negotiations with the president. nancy cordes talks to the speaker of the house about his negotiations with the president. and elizabeth palmer in dunblane scotland, one place that knows
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Dec 12, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano is in lancing for us tonight. >> right to work has got to go! >> reporter: union members from across michigan and other states voiced their anger at the michigan capital. mike huerta has been a member of the united auto workers union since 1997. >> no one wants this in this state. this state is where the birthplace of the united auto workers is, this place is where unions built the middle-class. >> reporter: but republican governor rick snyder insists the legislation will help workers by not forcing them to join unions or pay dues. >> if they don't see value in the union in terms of its activities, should they be forced to pay financial resources for that? i don't believe so. give them choice. >> reporter: the governor and republican lawmakers argue the legislation will attract businesses and keep jobs in michigan. union members argue it will result in lower wages. clear evidence for either argument is inconclusive. workers in right-to-work states do earn $300 more than their counterparts in non-right to work states according to data collected b
elaine quijano is in lancing for us tonight. >> right to work has got to go! >> reporter: union members from across michigan and other states voiced their anger at the michigan capital. mike huerta has been a member of the united auto workers union since 1997. >> no one wants this in this state. this state is where the birthplace of the united auto workers is, this place is where unions built the middle-class. >> reporter: but republican governor rick snyder insists the...
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Dec 25, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano sat down with some of the first police ijanoers on the scene. >> we were going as fast as we have ever driven, any of us. and we were running for that building. >> reporter: what did you see? what did you hear? >> i -- i could hear shots. ep reporter: officer michael mcgowan entered sandy hook elementary with sergeant david enllgren and officer liam seabrook. seabrook knocked out the glass on a locked rear door so the officers could get inside. >> we were moving down the hallway and we don't hea >>> the officer knocked out the glass at sandy hook so the other officers could get merchandise. >> we didn't see or hear anything. >> we could basically just smell gun powder. >> at what point did you realize what you were dealing with? >> immediately. once i got there i myself knew pretty much what was going on. we didn't have specific details yet. it was utterly shocking to anyone. there is no words that can describe. >> he and the other officers directed the students outside, shielding them. >> we didn't want them to see and i hope we did that. >> what did you say, officer?
elaine quijano sat down with some of the first police ijanoers on the scene. >> we were going as fast as we have ever driven, any of us. and we were running for that building. >> reporter: what did you see? what did you hear? >> i -- i could hear shots. ep reporter: officer michael mcgowan entered sandy hook elementary with sergeant david enllgren and officer liam seabrook. seabrook knocked out the glass on a locked rear door so the officers could get inside. >> we were...
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Dec 22, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano is in newtown, connecticut. >> reporter: six-year-old olivia engel loved being a big sister and helping her little brother explore. dylan hockley loved chocolate and seeing the moon. grace mcdonnel's family says she dreamed of being a painter. a memorial service for emilie parker was held last night in ogden, utah. her father robby parker is heartbroken. >> coming up the roads, we started to see the ribbons and all of your tributes to emily everywhere and a lot of you guys don't even know who she is. a lot of you never even met her. >> reporter: the last two faculty members were also laid to rest today. rachel d'avino's boyfriend was planning to propose on christmas eve. school psychologist mary sherlach was remembered for her devotion to kids in trouble. the processions of hearses in newtown are nearing an end. kim schnell doesn't know anyone here but traveled from virginia to pay her respects. >> i felt the call to come and so we got in the car and drove from virginia. just thinking about how many hurting people there are, how the acts of evil can affect so many people. >>
elaine quijano is in newtown, connecticut. >> reporter: six-year-old olivia engel loved being a big sister and helping her little brother explore. dylan hockley loved chocolate and seeing the moon. grace mcdonnel's family says she dreamed of being a painter. a memorial service for emilie parker was held last night in ogden, utah. her father robby parker is heartbroken. >> coming up the roads, we started to see the ribbons and all of your tributes to emily everywhere and a lot of you...
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Dec 20, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano has their stories. >> reporter: firefighters from across the northeast came to honor seven-year-old daniel barden. he wanted to be a firefighter someday. eddy bowles is from new york city. >> firefighters are here in tribute to this young child and all the souls lost in this community. >> reporter: sandy hook's fire department also stood at attention for caroline previdi's funeral. she loved to draw and dance. family friend joseph secola. >> it's heartbreaking when you see a small casket. the girl is six years old but she was a lovely girl that gave joy to people and that's what they have to hold on to. >> reporter: charlotte bacon, the seventh student to be laid to rest since the shooting, was remembered for her love of animals and the color pink. and at teacher vicki soto's funeral the crowd was so large people stood outside. inside singer paul simon performed "sound of silence." ♪ the sound of silence... >> reporter: there's still no clear evidence as to what triggered adam lanza's rampage but, scott, the medical examiner is bringing in a geneticist to see if lanza might have h
elaine quijano has their stories. >> reporter: firefighters from across the northeast came to honor seven-year-old daniel barden. he wanted to be a firefighter someday. eddy bowles is from new york city. >> firefighters are here in tribute to this young child and all the souls lost in this community. >> reporter: sandy hook's fire department also stood at attention for caroline previdi's funeral. she loved to draw and dance. family friend joseph secola. >> it's...
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Dec 24, 2012
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. >>> meanwhile the final three funerals were held over the weekend and elaine quijano has an interview with one of the first responders. >> we got in there and it led to the boiler room. >> reporter: they went into the sandy hook elementary school minutes after the cal went out. >> when i saw that officer penna had a rifle, i kind of told him, you're in front, buddy, and the heroism he displayed just to get in front of us -- >> the gun powder smoke in there is nothing i ever want to smell again because it was just overwhelming. >> what were you hearing at that point? >> silence. there was no noises. >> the quiet was deafening. every second seemed like an hour. >> i never experienced fear like that ever. it was -- i mean it was free-falling almost. >> reporter: the officers made their way through the kitchen and into the lobby. >> that's when my world came crashing in on me because i saw the victims there and i knew this wasn't a joke, this wasn't -- this was real and we had somebody that was murdering people in there. we knew that we couldn't help them because they were beyond that. yo
. >>> meanwhile the final three funerals were held over the weekend and elaine quijano has an interview with one of the first responders. >> we got in there and it led to the boiler room. >> reporter: they went into the sandy hook elementary school minutes after the cal went out. >> when i saw that officer penna had a rifle, i kind of told him, you're in front, buddy, and the heroism he displayed just to get in front of us -- >> the gun powder smoke in there is...
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Dec 22, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano is in newtown with more on that. good morning, elaine. >> reporter: good morning to you you, anthony. dignitaries and residents gathered for a moment of silence as the bell tolled 26 times. the solemn occasion marked one week since 20 children and six adults were killed at the sandy hook elementary school. nearby, the mood was somber too, as more wakes and funerals were held for the victims. meanwhile in washington the nra made its first public response since the tragedy. nra's president wayne lapierre spoke. he argued for the presence of armed guards in every american school. >> we need to have every single school in american immediately deploy a protection program, proven to work. and by that, i mean armed security. >> reporter: he took. >> questions from reporters and was interrupted twice by protesters. >> nra, stop killing our children. >> nra has blood on its hands! >> reporter: here in newtown, lapierre's suggestion of armed guards in school was mixed. andre's third grade sun survived the sandy hook shooting.
elaine quijano is in newtown with more on that. good morning, elaine. >> reporter: good morning to you you, anthony. dignitaries and residents gathered for a moment of silence as the bell tolled 26 times. the solemn occasion marked one week since 20 children and six adults were killed at the sandy hook elementary school. nearby, the mood was somber too, as more wakes and funerals were held for the victims. meanwhile in washington the nra made its first public response since the tragedy....
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Dec 19, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano is in newtown. good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you, charlie and norah. the search for comfort here means more funerals will take place today. it also means a slow return to things that once seemed routine. this simple act of going to school is no longer simple here. on the first day back after the shooting, it's become more of a ritual. mike morshuk planned to meet his 16-year-old daughter after class. >> i'll be waiting outside the car and hopefully a few friends will come over, give them a big hug and a kiss, you know. >> reporter: for students at sandy hook elementary classes won't resume until january. in an empty school being renovated nearby. their own building is still an active crime scene and may never be reopened. tuesday morning funerals were held for 6-year-old james mattioli who loved cuddling with his mom at the end of the day. and jessica rekos, who so loved horses. she had just asked santa for a new cowgirl hat. today there will be services for teacher vicki soto and principal dawn hochsprung. victims who are being hailed as heroes for th
elaine quijano is in newtown. good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you, charlie and norah. the search for comfort here means more funerals will take place today. it also means a slow return to things that once seemed routine. this simple act of going to school is no longer simple here. on the first day back after the shooting, it's become more of a ritual. mike morshuk planned to meet his 16-year-old daughter after class. >> i'll be waiting outside the car and hopefully a few...
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Dec 24, 2012
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those are true heroes here, as far as i'm concerned. >> for "cbs this morning," elaine quijano, newtown, connecticut. >> the true heroes:. >>> well on this christmas eve, the fiscal cliff is one day closer. much of the talk in congress on sunday focused on who's to blame for the lack of a deal. there are eight days left for lawmakers to head off mandatory budget cuts and tax hikes, and nancy cordes is in honolulu where president obama is having his christmas vacation. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you, rebecca. it's almost as if the president and congressional leaders have called a sort of time-out when it comes to the fiscal cliff. there are no major discussions going on right now about what to do now that talks between the president and the speaker appear to have stalled. in fact, the president and senate majority leader harry reid were both here in honolulu yesterday for the funeral of hawaii senator daniel inouye. we're told they didn't really discuss what to do next. before he left washington the president urged leaders to craft a sort of scaled down plan that s
those are true heroes here, as far as i'm concerned. >> for "cbs this morning," elaine quijano, newtown, connecticut. >> the true heroes:. >>> well on this christmas eve, the fiscal cliff is one day closer. much of the talk in congress on sunday focused on who's to blame for the lack of a deal. there are eight days left for lawmakers to head off mandatory budget cuts and tax hikes, and nancy cordes is in honolulu where president obama is having his christmas...
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Dec 31, 2012
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elaine quijano is outside presbyterian hospital in upper manhattan. concussi good morning. outside >> reporter: good morning to you, anthony. presbyte doctors are treating hillary morning. cl intoclinn witon th awithntic antoaguicoalantgulas tonts to thin out the blood clot and doctors arereating they'll continue to monitor her ton with for the next 48 hours. this was during a routine follow-up exam from a recent concussion. during this all began after the secretary contracted a stomach co illness which led to b dehydration. she fainted, hit her head, and sus& ainpsused atain coned acuss conion.cussion. she has not been seen in public sincfainted, hit her december. now, the statement from her since early spokesman said doctors will tement f continue to assess her condition including other issues assess associated with her concussion, uding othe but& thepbutre i thes nore i wors nod on wor whad ont what those other issues might be. no anthony?hat >> elaine quijano, thank you. >>> and a few miles to the south, times square is getting prea dy freador ty foonigr toht'snigh newt
elaine quijano is outside presbyterian hospital in upper manhattan. concussi good morning. outside >> reporter: good morning to you, anthony. presbyte doctors are treating hillary morning. cl intoclinn witon th awithntic antoaguicoalantgulas tonts to thin out the blood clot and doctors arereating they'll continue to monitor her ton with for the next 48 hours. this was during a routine follow-up exam from a recent concussion. during this all began after the secretary contracted a stomach...
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Dec 18, 2012
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elaine quijano with some of the first responders at the crime scene. >> i was almost wishing that it was full of injured people. i never -- nobody. >> pelley: higher taxes are coming but who should pay them? nancy cordes talks to the speaker of the house about his negotiations with the president. and elizabeth palmer in dunblane scotland, one place that knows newtown's long road to recovery all too well. >> i think out of the most tragic circumstances some good does appear. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening, more parents than usual walked with their kids as the schools of newtown reopened today. when a family met the stepped-up security there wasn't a sense of fear but a sense of moving
elaine quijano with some of the first responders at the crime scene. >> i was almost wishing that it was full of injured people. i never -- nobody. >> pelley: higher taxes are coming but who should pay them? nancy cordes talks to the speaker of the house about his negotiations with the president. and elizabeth palmer in dunblane scotland, one place that knows newtown's long road to recovery all too well. >> i think out of the most tragic circumstances some good does appear....
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Dec 29, 2012
12/12
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here's elaine quijano with a look back at then duerring friendship. >> reporter: e.b. white's "charlotte's web" has sold millions of copies. the story centers on a friendship between charlotte, a spied eric and wilbur a big destined for lauter. e.b. white based the big on his sickly pick. >> he did everything to do to save his life. worked with his son, stayed all night, had the veterinarian over two or three weeks. nothing worked. he's much more sad than he out to have been and it stays in his mind. >> reporter: as for the spider white's barn was filled with them and for her name charlotte a.cavatica, he consulted with experts. >> he learned he had the wrong name for the spider. he shrinks the name to a. >> reporter: even though she saves charlotte's web, white allows charlotte to die after lag her egg just as real barn spiders do. her death so moved the author he faltered when he recorded the audio book. >> when charlotte is dying and he has to read those words, no one was with her when she died and 16 times his voice cracked or he got tears in his eyes and on the 17
here's elaine quijano with a look back at then duerring friendship. >> reporter: e.b. white's "charlotte's web" has sold millions of copies. the story centers on a friendship between charlotte, a spied eric and wilbur a big destined for lauter. e.b. white based the big on his sickly pick. >> he did everything to do to save his life. worked with his son, stayed all night, had the veterinarian over two or three weeks. nothing worked. he's much more sad than he out to have...
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elaine quijano on a new study that could lead to a major change in treatment for breast cancer. >> recurrence is something you live with for your entire life. >> pelley: a household name in computers is wanted in a murder investigation. bob orr reports he was tracked down by the technology he lived by. and we note two milestones: an eyewitness to this moment in history has died. then anthony mason will take five to remember dave brubeck, a giant of jazz. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening, they've never said it quite like this: the president's treasury secretary made i
elaine quijano on a new study that could lead to a major change in treatment for breast cancer. >> recurrence is something you live with for your entire life. >> pelley: a household name in computers is wanted in a murder investigation. bob orr reports he was tracked down by the technology he lived by. and we note two milestones: an eyewitness to this moment in history has died. then anthony mason will take five to remember dave brubeck, a giant of jazz. captioning sponsored by cbs...
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Dec 27, 2012
12/12
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elaine quijano has more. >> good morning to you jeff and rebecca. according to early numbers shoppers were not in the holiday spending spirit and some of the reasons had nothing to do with the economy. holiday retail sales grew just 0.7% this year far short of expectations and down from 2% a year ago. >> whether it was hurricane sandy and the need to spend on the home whether it was the tragedy in connecticut and took away the feel-good factor it was a confluence of events that led to a should have been better holiday season. >> reporter: in the densely populated northeast, where more than a fifth of the country's retail sales take place, homeowners hit hard by hurricane sandy spent more money on repairs than on holiday gifts. also dragging down sales was uncertainty about the fiscal cliff, tax hikes and spending cuts set to take effect next year. if lawmakers don't reach a deal to avoid it consumers could see higher taxes eating into their paychecks. even online sales suffered compared to past years of double-digit growth this year online holiday s
elaine quijano has more. >> good morning to you jeff and rebecca. according to early numbers shoppers were not in the holiday spending spirit and some of the reasons had nothing to do with the economy. holiday retail sales grew just 0.7% this year far short of expectations and down from 2% a year ago. >> whether it was hurricane sandy and the need to spend on the home whether it was the tragedy in connecticut and took away the feel-good factor it was a confluence of events that led...